This is a hard call, but I'm all for seeing CORE made "really" small and
(if possible) fitting onto a single CD. If this means making the hard
decisions about having to get a couple of my favorite apps from Extra to
get a equivalent desktop setup instead of having to download four ISO's
(soon, at this rate, to be five or six) then I'm all for dropping of the
apps I use into Extras.

Lets face it, if we're really interested in shrinking the size of the
distro, cutting a few packages like XMMS isn't going to make a spit of
difference. Not even eliminating unused packages is going to do much good.

If we want to make an appreciable difference in the size of FC, we've
got to cut at least enough to remove a CD or two. If we just cut a few
redundant packages, we piss some people off, but gain nearly nothing.

If we really want to cut the size of the distro by more than a few
hundred meg, we've got to start removing functionality. Plain and
simple. Something that lots of people *need* has to go. And you're not
going to do it without making a whole lot of people really, really mad.

So, what gets the ax? Tough to say. There's only 15 packages in fc3 that
are >= 20 Meg. And OOo accounts for almost 200M of that. But can we
really ax OpenOffice? Heresy. KDE? Blasphemous.

Sure, we could move packages to Extras... if only we had some idea what
Extras is. Whatever it is, though, I'm quite certain that the packages
*I* use don't belong there, right? But if the Extras CDs are distributed
with the core CDs, and if most people will need the Extras CDs to get
those last three packages they're rather fond of, what really is the
point dividing them up? Other than, of course, to inconvenience the
user. I was all for it a few hours ago, but now it doesn't sound like
we'll be helping anyone out.

The way I see it, we're left with two options:
A) Big distro. Deal with it.
B) Piss lots of people off because Fedora no longer includes the
software they use. Sorry KDE and OOo users.

The third option, "remove the stuff people don't use", seems more like a
pipe dream than a viable course of action. You can't remove enough fat
to keep A from happening without bringing about B. Moving a substantial
amount of stuff into an "Extras" category (or whatever it is) seems like
a "worst of both worlds" solution. Not only has the total software base
not shrunk, but it's now more difficult to find the package you want.
What are the chances, really, that the average user *won't* want at
least some of the software on the Extras CD(s)?

I don't know. The more I think about it, the less excited I get. Perhaps
someone can share a more rosy picture of how moving packages to Fedora
Extras is supposed to make the users' lives so much easier. Anyone care
to bite?